Search canberratimes:

Search in:

Chinese revellers put on their metal

Tom Hancock

Sparks will fly ... Chinese blacksmiths wait their turn to throw molten metal against a cold stone wall to create sparks, part of festivities to end the Lunar New Year celebrations, in Nuanquan, Hebei province on Sunday. Photo: AFP

Nuanquan, China: Fireworks lit up the sky across China and straw-hatted farmers in one village hurled molten metal into the air, as the country marked the end of Lunar New Year festivities.

China's Lantern Festival traditionally signals the close of 15 days of rest and feasting during the Lunar New Year, the country's biggest holiday, which sees hundreds of millions return to their ancestral homes.

Across the country, cities echoed with explosions as millions took to the streets to set off fireworks, and one village hosted a molten metal throwing festival, one of a host of ancient customs revived in recent decades.

With little more than a straw hat and goggles for protection, a team of farmers spooned molten hot metal from buckets before hurling it at a brick wall, where it rained down in fountains of glowing shards.

Advertisement

The spectacle brought roars of approval from the audience in Nuanquan village, a few hours drive from Beijing, which has revived the centuries-old festival in a bid to boost tourism, building a dedicated amphitheatre for the purpose.

Scrap iron collected from households in the village is melted down in primitive furnaces, which shoot flames and torrents of sparks into the night sky behind the Technicolor stage.

Donning a straw hat and a woolly jacket, one 49-year-old maize farmer completed his transition to a fire-thrower, telling AFP: "I love doing it... there's no danger at all."

The fiery festival is said to have been invented over 300 years ago by poor blacksmiths in the village who could not afford the fireworks traditionally used during the season.

"We have an ancient saying, 'If you don't set off fireworks or throw molten metal ... the village won't be peaceful'. We still believe that," festival performer Liu Yueqing said, before taking to the stage in a bright yellow uniform.

But the festival was banned during the tumultuous decade of the Cultural Revolution from 1966 to 1976. "If you took part, you could be arrested," a resident surnamed Zou said.

While hot metal sparks fizzed under the full moon, others in China set off fireworks and ate sweet dumplings to mark the festival.